Thousands of Virgin Media employees will soon be able to work from their beds a variety of locations after the telco asked network kit biz Cisco to deploy its Quad, WebEx and Unified Comms products.
The tech sets free office-based folk so they can work remotely and on-the-go with video calls and shared documents, said Cisco. …

COMMENTS

international workers !

lets hope this doesnt extend to customer help lines otherwise when I got some numpty on the phone from one of their call centres in india that I can hardly understand due to their accent, the situation will be made worse by the background noise of their family, which I also wont be able to understand !

Finally....

....VM staff will see first hand how 'overutilisation' on their UBR stops them from doing simple thing like video streaming, due to lost packets and other such problems customers often have for 6 months before being fixed.

Good on Virgin Media

Now, if they could just get my Phone and Broadband working at the same time for a period of 5 days or more then I'll consider it real progress, Quite how it goes from 14 months of stability to the game of roulette it's been for the past month is beyond me.

Balance

I know that if you have connection problems that it's immensely frustrating, but after the hell I went through attempting to get BT Infinity (and failing after they said I could get it), Virgin Media have provided a fast and reliable connection.

I have noticed occasional streaming dropouts from iPlayer in HD mode on my 50 Mb service, but if I speedtest at the same time I've got loads of bandwidth there.

It's a crapload better than the flaky limited rubbish my parents have to pay plus.net who pay BT wholesale for.

VM Practices

Wat, Speedtest looks good using an ISP that does business with end users?

Almost certainly prioritizing their traffic, just the same way they shape NNTP except ofc their own. Oh yeah and throttle traffic 24/7 regardless of their deliberately unintelligible and ambiguous policy.